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OK here's my question to you, since you are the OP...if you are happy with your kid's school in Plano, then why do you care about what's going on in other districts??? they dont affect you or your kid in any way shape or form. I know I dont look at other districts...all I care about is the school my kid is in and how she's doing. End of story. And for what it's worth, dont you think PISD SHOULD be doing better than Dallas? Plano does not have the high percentage of reduced lunch/english as a second language crowd that Dallas has to deal with, thus Plano should be wiping Dallas of the map. Y'all bragging about Plano is akin to a healthy 21 year old guy beating a 75 year old man in a sprint. Nothing to really brag about in my book.

My intention is not to brag about PISD, and my post exposes a few mediocre schools in Plano.

I'm only interested in the facts, cutting through BS, and to give objective data to people thinking about moving here. Telling someone that the schools are fantastic in a neighborhood because of an elementary school, ignoring the middle school and high school, does a disservice to people wanting to relocate here.

Why are you here? Why does some guy have over 14,000 posts? I don't really care, nor is it relevant. I think people who start personally insulting others because they don't like what they wrote on the Internet are pathetic.

What I had was a lot of people shooting the messenger and going after me personally, my motive, lumping me in with everyone in Plano, everyone in California, etc.

I wasn't bragging about PISD, however someone has informed me that her child's school is superior to the one my kids will go to. Good for her!

I had an opinion that DISD schools weren't very good. I did some investigating after being challenged on that and, except for a couple of magnet schools, I still have that opinion.

You say it yourself...competitive. Not better performing, competitive. SAT scores are one factor to the overall picture of said student. Students scoring between 2000 and 2200 will be much more likely viewed by the "other" factors. While I agree that students in the 1500 v. 1700 range will be viewed as much more of a gap, it will be more weighted towards the SAT scores. Those who score in the upper ranges will be "competitively" pitted against each other w/ the SAT score being a small factor in consideration.

This is another factor that I meant to bring up in the other post, but never got back around to that thread. The SAT scores have 3 components to them. The scores you've posted before only appear to have 2 of the components to the score(s). Why is that?

Oh, and my oldest...going to Yale. 2190 SAT. #3 in her class.

The non-minority students at Woodrow, LH, and Pearce are not just competitive with CoCo- they are outscoring every single CoCo high school outside of PISD. Every single one of them.

The reason I post the math + verbal only is that there hasn't been new data published with the third component breaking it down to the school & demographic level. It is expected to come out again this summer.

The non-minority students at Woodrow, LH, and Pearce are not just competitive with CoCo- they are outscoring every single CoCo high school outside of PISD. Every single one of them.

The reason I post the math + verbal only is that there hasn't been new data published with the third component breaking it down to the school & demographic level. It is expected to come out again this summer.

I'm only looking at city-data's 2009 numbers, the latest they have, but Woodrow's White kids scored lower than Allen High School's.

And you got upset because I slandered DISD, yet you keep touting Richardson ISD schools. Why?

I think it's misleading to people wanting to move here to ignore the middle school and high school and only talk about the elementary school.

If you would read more threads before spouting off on here, you would know that the middle & high school choices in Lakewood have been debated TO DEATH. They certainly aren't "ignored" on city-data. Not even close. The consensus is that each family must decide for themselves to go public v private, private which families paying $500k & up for homes can afford.

You need to understand that the Lakewood contingent of students at Long & Woodrow (mostly the white, affluent students) go to basically a "school within a school", a phenomenon not uncommon for the "complex urban schools" which I mentioned earlier in this thread. They are in the honors, AP, and IB classes together and don't mix academically with the bottom 2/3 of the class.

When you examine that subset (the subset any family looking at Lakewood woud find their kids in), they kick butt-->Woodrow's AP pass rate for white students ranks 9th in the metroplex at 57%. Plano East is just behind Woodrow at 56.8% passing. Schools ahead of Woodrow include Plano West, Garland, DISD Hillcrest, Highland Park, DISD WT White, RISD Richardson & Pearce HS. Other CoCo high schools are as follows: Allen 41%, Frisco Wakeland 31.6%, Frisco Centennial 30.3%, and Frisco 43.1%.

Futhermore, Woodrow has recently been awarded the prestigious International Baccalaureate program after a two-year application period. It is only the 4th North Texas public school to be awarded the IB program. Up to 40% of the freshman enrolling in the first year (2011-2012) live outside the Woodrow zone, and even are coming from other parts of the metroplex. Crappy schools just don't get the IB program.

Also J. L. Long Middle School (Woodrow's only feeder) has been named a candidate for International Baccalaureate MYP (Middle Years Programme) and as such will be able to offer the curriculum starting September 1st.

There are less than two-dozen public middle schools in Texas offering IB MYP.

If you would read more threads before spouting off on here, you would know that the middle & high school choices in Lakewood have been debated TO DEATH. They certainly aren't "ignored" on city-data. Not even close. The

In the other thread you referred to, Lakewooder took umbrage to my comment about the schools, which is what you quoted, and cited the elementary schools and ignored the middle school (you seem to keep ignoring middle schools) and the high school.

Got it? I didn't say 'city-data'. I was referring to the thread you cited. The middle school (still being ignored) and the high school were ignored in that thread, so I posted the data for J.L. Long and Woodrow Wilson, which are the schools that Lakewood Elementary feeds into.

In regards to your test scores, I just posted the city-data 2009 numbers that contradicts at least one of your claims. Maybe you have more recent figures?

I cannot comment on the relative virtues of DISD vs. Plano West schools, but I can say after having lived in Plano for ten years and then moving to what is considered one of the best schools in Austin ISD, that my appreciation for the education my children received in Plano has grown. The funding is so much greater in Plano. My kids' school has 30 year old portables rather than a much needed addition. In Plano the PACE (GT program) was phenomenal compared to here. In fact, outside of the magnet, there is no gifted program at the middle school--just pre-AP accelerated, which is not a gifted program. Class sizes are larger here as well, and funding for programs like Destination Imagination is nonexistent. Parents must foot the bills themselves. My house in Plano sold last August, so I don't have dog in this fight, but Hightower Elementary and Frankford Middle School served our family very well. I don't know anything about Lakewood schools, but I love that area and think the homes and neighborhood are beautiful.

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